The total percent would be 100. 361,132,000 km²
I don't think we have estimated the volume yet. The surface of the world is 70% water.
freshwater is 68.7% and total water is 1.9% on earth. i got this answer from explorelearning.com in the water cycle gizmo.
Water makes up about 0.0001% of the total mass of the universe. This includes water vapor in the atmosphere, water in comets, asteroids, and icy planets.
To find the salt percentage in the mixture, first convert 1 gallon of water to pounds, which is approximately 8.34 lbs. The total weight of the mixture is 1.5 lbs (salt) + 8.34 lbs (water) = 9.84 lbs. The salt percentage is then calculated as (1.5 lbs salt / 9.84 lbs total) × 100, which is approximately 15.2%.
To find the percentage of 17g of sucrose in 188g of water, first calculate the total weight by summing both amounts (17g + 188g = 205g). Then, divide the weight of the sucrose by the total weight and multiply by 100 to get the percentage: (17g / 205g) * 100 ≈ 8.29%.
Assuming an average adult has about 42 liters of body water, losing 4 liters would represent about 9.5% of their total body water.
Doubt there would be a lot coz 1% of total water is available for mankind.
20 percent of the world's electricity and 6 percent of its total energy.
70 percentage three quarters of the world
72%
For optimal health and hydration, your total body water percentage should be around 50-65.
70 percent of the world is water
Out of total volume of 1400Km3 of available water in the world, about 3.0 percent is only usable fresh water out of which 25 percent is only is ground water on earth. Out of this total 25 percentage of groundwater, 14% is at depth > 1KM and remaining 11% is at depth < 1 KM.
53% of water is undrinkable
70%
Of total water available in earth, 2.59% of water is fresh and in that 2% of water is frozen as glaciers in the poles. Ground water constitutes around 0.592% and about 0.014% is present in lakes, ponds, etc.
about 70 percent of water covers the world
Approximately 97% of the world's water is stored in oceans as salt water.